What CITES documents are required for international trade?

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§ 23.20 What CITES documents are required for international trade?

(a) Purpose. Articles III, IV, and V of the Treaty give the types of standard CITES documents that must accompany an Appendix-I, -II, or -III specimen in international trade. Articles VII and XIV recognize some exemptions and provide that a CITES document must accompany most exempt specimens.

(b) Stricter national measures. Before importing, introducing from the sea, exporting, or re-exporting a specimen, check with the Management Authorities of all countries concerned to obtain any documentation required under stricter national measures.

(c) CITES documents. Except as provided in the regulations in this part, you must have a valid CITES document to engage in international trade in any CITES specimen.

(d) CITES exemption documents. The following table lists the CITES exemption document that you must obtain before conducting a proposed activity with an exempt specimen (other than specimens exempted under § 23.92). If one of the exemptions does not apply to the specimen, you must obtain a CITES document as provided in paragraph (e) of this section. The first column in the following table alphabetically lists the type of specimen or activity that may qualify for a CITES exemption document. The last column indicates the section of this part that contains information on the application procedures, provisions, criteria, and conditions specific to each CITES exemption document, as follows:

Expand Table
Type of specimen or activity Appendix CITES exemption document Section
(1) Artificially propagated plant (see paragraph (d)(4) of this section for an Appendix-I plant propagated for commercial purposes) I, II, or III CITES document with source code “A”1 23.40
(2) Artificially propagated plant from a country that has provided copies of the certificates, stamps, and seals to the Secretariat II or III Phytosanitary certificate with CITES statement1 23.23(f)
(3) Bred-in-captivity wildlife (see paragraph (d)(5) of this section for Appendix-I wildlife bred in captivity for commercial purposes) I, II, or III CITES document with source code “C”1 23.41
(4) Commercially propagated Appendix-I plant I CITES document with source code “D”1 23.47
(5) Commercially bred Appendix-I wildlife from a breeding operation registered with the CITES Secretariat I CITES document with source code “D”1 23.46
(6) Export of certain marine specimens protected under a pre-existing treaty, convention, or international agreement for that species II CITES document indicating that the specimen was taken in accordance with provisions of the applicable treaty, convention, or international agreement 23.36(e)
23.39(e)
(7) Hybrid plants I, II, or III CITES document unless the specimen qualifies as an exempt plant hybrid 23.42
(8) Hybrid wildlife I, II, or III CITES document unless the specimen qualifies as an exempt wildlife hybrid 23.43
(9) In-transit shipment (see paragraph (d)(14) of this section for sample collections covered by an ATA carnet) I, II, or III CITES document designating importer and country of final destination 23.22
(10) Introduction from the sea under a pre-existing treaty, convention, or international agreement for that species II Document required by applicable treaty, convention, or international agreement, if appropriate 23.39(d)
(11) Noncommercial loan, donation, or exchange of specimens between scientific institutions registered with the CITES Secretariat I, II, or III A label indicating CITES and the registration codes of both institutions and, in the United States, a CITES certificate of scientific exchange that registers the institution3 23.48
(12) Personally owned live wildlife for multiple cross-border movements I, II, or III CITES certificate of ownership2 23.44
(13) Pre-Convention specimen I, II, or III CITES document indicating pre-Convention status1 23.45
(14) Sample collection covered by an ATA carnet I4, II, or III CITES document indicating sample collection2 23.50
(15) Traveling exhibition I, II, or III CITES document indicating specimens qualify as pre-Convention, bred in captivity, or artificially propagated2 23.49

(e) Import permits, export permits, re-export certificates, and certificates of origin. Unless one of the exemptions under paragraph (d) of this section or § 23.92 applies, you must obtain the following CITES documents before conducting the proposed activity:

Expand Table
Appendix Type of CITES document(s) required
I Import permit (§ 23.35) and either an export permit (§ 23.36) or re-export certificate (§ 23.37)
II Export permit (§ 23.36) or re-export certificate (§ 23.37)
III Export permit (§ 23.36) if the specimen originated in a country that listed the species; certificate of origin (§ 23.38) if the specimen originated in a country other than the listing country, unless the listing annotation indicates otherwise; or re-export certificate for all re-exports (§ 23.37)

(f) Introduction-from-the-sea certificates. For introduction from the sea of Appendix-I or Appendix-II specimens, you must obtain an introduction-from-the-sea certificate before conducting the proposed activity, unless the exemption in paragraph (d)(10) of this section applies (see § 23.39). The export of a specimen that was previously introduced from the sea will be treated as an export (see § 23.36 for export, § 23.36(e) and § 23.39(e) for export of exempt specimens, or § 23.37 for re-export). Although an Appendix-III specimen does not require a CITES document to be introduced from the sea, the subsequent international trade of the specimen would be considered an export. For export of an Appendix-III specimen that was introduced from the sea you must obtain an export permit (§ 23.36) if the export is from the country that listed the species in Appendix III, a certificate of origin (§ 23.38) if the export is from a country other than the listing country, or a re-export certificate for all re-exports (§ 23.37).


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